Hepatic hemodynamics in patients with chronic hepatitis or cirrhosis as assessed by organ-reflectance spectrophotometry
- PMID: 6218008
Hepatic hemodynamics in patients with chronic hepatitis or cirrhosis as assessed by organ-reflectance spectrophotometry
Abstract
Hepatic hemodynamics in patients with chronic liver disease has been studied by reflectance spectrophotometry of the liver in situ during peritoneoscopy. An organ-reflectance spectrophotometer used in this study was equipped with a branched optic fiber bundle, which coupled the liver surface with the spectrophotometer. The spectrophotometry could measure qualitatively and quantitatively the absorption of hemoglobin in the liver in situ, thus estimating the regional hepatic tissue blood hemoglobin concentration and the saturation level of hemoglobin in the regional tissue blood. The analysis of 42 cases has shown that the estimated regional hepatic tissue blood hemoglobin concentration and saturation level of hemoglobin decreased in most cirrhotic livers, suggesting that even in cirrhotic livers the hepatic oxygen extraction increased, concomitant with a decrease in the regional hepatic tissue blood hemoglobin concentration. The hepatic blood hemoglobin concentration estimated on the surface layer of the liver was positively correlated with the regional hepatic blood flow measured by radioisotope clearance technique. The estimated hepatic blood hemoglobin concentration was also correlated positively with serum albumin level and prothrombin time, and negatively correlated with plasma retention of indocyanine green at 15 min. It is concluded that the hepatic tissue blood hemoglobin concentration decreases significantly with progress of chronic hepatitis to cirrhosis. This decrease in hepatic blood hemoglobin concentration and flow is concomitant with a decrease in metabolic functions, which is not compensated by an increased hepatic oxygen extraction.
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